"If I am understanding it right, you are starting to be notice: people are mentioning your name publicly.
Wish you a nice holiday."
My answer was as follows:
Yep political people are worried check out the email I got from
Senator Mean Mikey Duffy yesterday. No doubt you will enjoy my
response.
http://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.ca/2016/07/re-interesting-response-i-got-today.html
Below is a good example of the British nonsense byway the Guardian
newsrag first thing this morning. Everybody in the know knows and yet
they all are still playing as dumb as posts.
Never forget both these blogs were created by Chucky Leblanc's strange
friends in Fredericton
http://qslspolitics.blogspot.ca/2009/03/david-amos-to-wendy-olsen-on.html
http://thedavidamosrant.blogspot.ca/2013/01/good-evening-special-agent-mark.html
If ordinary folks who support Maude Barlow and Dizzy Lizzy May (both
backed by George Soros) are not aware well they can simply Google my
name and the email addresses below to sort out the truth from fiction
for themselves. It is easy to see when the info was published and who
got it within various blogs that still exist on the Internet to this
very day The Council of Canadian wackos in Fredericton have known
about all of this since I first ran for Parliament 2004 and Chucky
Leblanc stole the documents he promised to give to Brad Green and gave
it to the Fake Left in Fat Fred City instead, As I said the real
problem is that Apathy rules the day.
The Guardian's spin is my best example this morning concerning this
email to the FCA yesterday (I included Mr XXXX in this email in case
he is ethical)
Eddy Baby Pilkington the Guardian's main man in the Big Apple has
obviously ignored my concerns about FranK McKenna, the TD RBC, BMO
Scotia, RBS and Citizens Bank etc for the benefit of Spitzer, Cutler
of JP Morgan & Chase, Carney pals in Goldman and Sachs and all their
bankster buddies months.
The shit went down with RBS and the the Guardian knew it months before
Occupy Wall Street became the big thing funded by George Soros as he
tortures his old political foe Chucky Koch of the RBS and the Citizens
Bank etc etc etc
https://www.theguardian.com/profile/edpilkington
----- Original Message -----
From: David Amos
To: ed.pilkington@guardian.co.uk
Cc: david.raymond.amos@gmail.com
Sent: Wednesday, August 03, 2011 4:04 PM
Subject: Ed Here is your ticket to keep you out of hot water Just send
this to Hugh Grant and he can raise hell for you
Byway of the US FTC the Feds in many countries can never deny that
they did not know the truth long ago
---------- Original message ----------
From: Ed Pilkington
Subject: GUARDIAN
To: David Amos
Date: Wednesday, August 3, 2011, 11:42 AM
hi
here's my email and my cell number is below
all best
Ed
--
Ed Pilkington
New York bureau chief
The Guardian
www.guardian.co.uk
twitter.com/Edpilkington
Cell: 646 704 1264
Please consider the environment before printing this email.
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---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos
Date: Mon, 10 Oct 2011 11:49:20 -0300
Subject: RE FSA complaint # PC41073. ISS10441377 I just called Mr Goldfarb
of RBS again
To: Sheldon.Goldfarb@rbsgc.com, "ellen.alemany"
"ed.pilkington"
Cc: maritime_malaise
public.enquiries@hm-treasury.gov.uk, ministers@hm-treasury.gov.uk
http://thedavidamosrant.blogspot.ca/2013/08/fwd-snowden-aint-got-nothing-on-mean.html
---------- Original message ----------
From: Ed Pilkington
Date: Sun, 18 Aug 2013 18:54:29 -0700
Subject: OUT OF OFFICE Re: Snowden ain't got nothing on mean old me
when it comes to dealing with corrupt Feds and keeping one's Integrity
as well
To: motomaniac333@gmail.com
I am out of the office and will not return until Tuesday 27 August.
Any urgent matters please contact Shy Winkfield on the news desk at
shy.winkfield@guardiannews.com
Ed Pilkington
Chief reporter
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2016/jul/17/andrew-bailey-financial-conduct-authority-chill-may-wind
Sunday 17 July 2016 06.59 BST
George Osborne’s financial conduct chief faces chill May wind
Sean Farrell
Andrew Bailey had barely got his feet under the desk when political
upheaval landed him with a new boss and a changed attitude towards the
City
A lot has changed since George Osborne announced Andrew Bailey as new
head of the Financial Conduct Authority less than six months ago.
Osborne was then in his post-election pomp and seen as the most likely
successor to David Cameron. He had ousted Martin Wheatley, Bailey’s
predecessor, for being too tough on the banks and declared interim
boss Tracey McDermott out of the running without warning her.
But Bailey, who started on 1 July, had barely got his feet under the
desk before Theresa May replaced Osborne with Philip Hammond, whose
views on regulation we don’t yet know. The FCA is, of course, set up
as an independent watchdog, but it can’t help notice the way the
political wind is blowing. After May’s attack on “the privileged few”,
Osborne’s push to cosy up to the City may not be so fashionable. So
it’s a great week for Bailey, who joined from the Bank of England, to
face questions at the FCA’s annual meeting on Tuesday and then from
Andrew Tyrie and the gang at the Treasury committee the next day.
Potential subjects for discussion include the dropping-off of FCA
fines to a trickle this year, delays in getting new firms authorised
and staffing levels that appear to be stretched. What are morale and
employee turnover like after Osborne’s dismissal of Wheatley and
McDermott?
Commercial property crisis brews
Commercial property has been one of the biggest business casualties of
the Brexit vote, so it’s good timing that Land Securities and British
Land report on trading this week. Since 4 July, seven funds invested
in office blocks, retail parks and the like have barred withdrawals or
cut their value as retail investors head for the door. The Bank of
England has warned commercial property prices, especially in London,
are too high.
It’s easy to see how things could go wrong. Foreign investment, which
has fuelled the boom, is ebbing, and values are falling on concerns
about the economy. As Mike Prew, an analyst at Jefferies, points out,
commercial property is mainly funded by bank lending and owners of
property have taken on more debt. Smaller banks are more exposed than
big lenders and 75% of small- and medium-sized companies use property
as collateral.
The share prices of commercial real estate companies have fallen
heavily since the referendum result. Land Securities and British Land
are the two biggest and their trading updates will coincide with their
annual general meetings this week. Shareholders should inquire about
this brew of risks.
Lack of direction at easyJet?
What is going on post-Brexit at easyJet, which publishes a trading
update on Thursday? On the Friday of the referendum result, the budget
airline issued a vague but reassuring statement saying that it would
continue to achieve long-term earnings growth and returns for
shareholders. But the following Monday it published a more detailed
update listing problems in the European aviation industry such as
cancellations and saying Brexit had made things worse. Analysts were
bemused by the timing of the two statements but didn’t get the chance
to question Carolyn McCall, easyJet’s chief executive.
There are also questions about how Brexit will affect easyJet’s
ability to fly throughout Europe and where it will base its
operations. The message from the company is that it may need one or
two extra air operator certificates, in addition to its UK and Swiss
ones now, but that would mean placing a handful of employees in a
particular country. It all depends on the deal the new government
manages to get from the EU. Whatever the outcome, easyJet’s head
office and its 1,000 employees would stay at Luton airport, a
spokesman said. Still, there’s nothing like hearing things from the
boss, so there will be plenty to talk about when McCall faces analysts
for the first time since the Brexit vote.
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2004/may/06/royalbankofscotlandgroup
Thursday 6 May 2004 09.02 BST
RBS pays $500m to Charter directors Nils Pratley
The 20 most senior directors and executives of Charter One Financial
will share a cash payout of about $500m (£280m) - large even by
American standards - after agreeing its sale to Royal Bank of
Scotland.
The $10.5bn, all-cash takeover sent shares in RBS down 5.6% to £16.25
as the group attempted to raise £2.75bn through a stock market placing
to fund the deal.
The bank's brokers were confident last night that the cash would be
raised at a price between £16.10 and £16.20 a share. It is the second
largest placing yet in London.
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